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Cree acquires lighting manufacturer Ruud and BetaLED subsidary
17 Aug 2011
Cree has acquired Ruud Lighting, including its specialist LED brand BetaLED, for $525 million and plans to operate the acquisition as a subsidiary of Cree Lighting.

Durham, NC-based Cree Inc acquired Ruud Lighting through a stock and cash transaction valued at approximately $525 million. The companies have a history of partnership in pushing the adoption of LED-based solid-state lighting (SSL), and Cree plans to operate Ruud and its BetaLED brand as a subsidiary of Cree Lighting.

Cree says that its motivation for the acquisition exactly matches the company's stated mission of accelerating the deployment and market acceptance of SSL. Chuck Swoboda, Cree's chairman and CEO said, "Cree is taking another bold step in leading the LED lighting revolution, creating a company that has an unrivaled focus and commitment to driving LED lighting adoption."

Cree and BetaLED have been close partners over a number of years, with the latter using many Cree LEDs in its fixtures. BetaLED will bring a greatly expanded sales channel for Cree Lighting's system products.

Ruud will continue to operate from its Racine, WI headquarters with more than 800 employees joining Cree. Alan Ruud, former chairman and chief executive officer of Ruud Lighting, has joined the Cree board of directors. The acquisition includes $372 million in cash, and stock valued at $211 million based on Wednesday's closing market price of $34.74.

Ruud joins Cree Lighting

Of course Cree is not new to the position of selling both packaged LEDs and lighting fixtures and systems that use the LEDs – presumably in competition with other customers of the component business. Cree entered the lighting systems business in early 2008 when it acquired LED Lighting Fixtures from former Cree Inc co-founder Neal Hunter, and made Hunter the president of Cree LED Lighting Solutions.

Still, Cree has insisted that its activity in the lighting space was ultimately focused on helping LED component customers knock down roadblocks to widespread SSL deployment. Indeed, major announcements this year of an Energy-Star-compliant retrofit lamp for 60W A Lamps, and an even more-efficient prototype that outputs 1330 lm both appeared to be reference designs more so than products destined for sale under the Cree Lighting brand.

Impact on Cree LED customers

Now, however, Cree will operate a lighting business that is solely focused on winning in the fixture/systems game. BetaLED has primarily been focused on the outdoor-lighting market, and is clearly one of the market leaders in the lucrative LED street light space based on publicly-announced customers such as the City of Los Angeles. BetaLED has less of a presence in indoor applications, but without question, has been a major Cree customer.

BetaLED will certainly provide Cree with a ready outlet for the system products, including modules, that Cree Inc and Cree Lighting have introduced. The ready availability of that technology will enable BetaLED to quickly address applications beyond its outdoor-lighting base. Ruud said, "Joining Cree was the right thing to do so Ruud Lighting can build on our leadership position; as leaders we create opportunities for everyone."

Surely Ruud's statement was meant to allay the concerns of other Cree LED customers while recognizing the value that a closer tie will bring to Ruud fixture customers. But that closer relationship will clearly worry some customers of Cree LEDs.

Cree stated that it would gain even more knowledge and expertise regarding what system and luminaire designers need in next-generation LEDs via the Ruud acquisition. There's surely some truth in that, but we will wait to see if it's enough to keep other LED customers from looking elsewhere for a supplier.

Vertical integration trend

Cree isn't the only LED vendor to have close ties to lighting companies. LED maker Philips Lumileds is a sister business to several Philips Lighting brands and the same is true for Osram Opto Semiconductor and Sylvania. Perhaps it's such vertical integration that's needed to drive SSL prices down and increase market penetration.

Vertical intregration may seem unusual, comparing the LED industry to the structure in today's broader semiconductor market. However, back in the 70's and 80's all of the IC vendors also made system products.

About the Author 
Maury Wright is the Senior Technical Editor of LEDs Magazine.
COMMENTS
Name: austin   Posted: Thu, 18 Aug 2011 13:08
Not surprising Cree getting further into fixtures with this move. I wonder how many fixture companies will reconsider using Cree LEDs in their products, to avoid supporting a competitor.
Name: ledmo   Posted: Thu, 18 Aug 2011 16:08
Not surprised, actually i am more surprised it took this long. I expect Cree to be buying more companies and becoming a luminaire manufacturer. LED lamps will be next. The have the knowledge, but in this market you need the brand too. Within the professional lighting market the Cree brand is certainly strong now.
Name: not surprised   Posted: Fri, 19 Aug 2011 11:08
The same thing happened in the hard drive industry. Western Digital made controller cards for Seagate's hard drives. When Western started making their own hard drives, Seagate stopped buying from Western.
Name: ghard   Posted: Wed, 24 Aug 2011 23:08
This stinks. A LED manufacturer buying a led fixture manufacturer? It is unfair competition
Name: jim dilbeck   Posted: Thu, 25 Aug 2011 01:08
RE the statement, "Perhaps it's such vertical integration that's needed to drive SSL prices down...", quite the opposite will occur. We utilize Philips LEDs in our products yet are market-priced well below our Philips luminiare competitors. Having been a Philips employee for almost a decade and seeing the true elephantine nature of such a company, the same beuracracy that Cree is creating and the wall it is building around itself will only dilute their specialization and expertise.
Name: cedup   Posted: Thu, 25 Aug 2011 03:08
Cree has to get some volume going. Philips is the biggest lighting company in the world, they make the best LED, Lumileds, sell to everyone, yet they have more fixture brands themselves under their umbrella than anyone (http://www.philipsna.com/brands.html)....just cus you own a fixture company doesn't mean the other you don't own won't buy your LED, if it's good. Philips has it all cornered.
Name: iconoclassactionsuit   Posted: Thu, 25 Aug 2011 06:08
This has caused a huge level of discontent and bad feeling in multiple OEM boards and exacerbates an already unhappy situation - nourishing and nurturing a competitor goes against the grain of every business mind. I don't know of one US lighting manufacturer's president that is happy with the previous LLF arrangement. This new move is bound to enhance that mood of discontent dramatically and in my opinion will probably generate a significant push-back by year's end.

Cree, previously a specification-necessity due to notably brilliant marketing have become a pariah some many boardrooms.

I see this as a smart lighting manufacture investment on one hand, and on the other a likely admission that Cree don't believe that they are going to be in the discrete LED pakage market in a few years time. If they hope to be there I certainly don't see their sales staff getting through most corporate doors now other than to be harangued by confused management teams.

Personally, I find it more than a little annoying that less than one year ago Cree staff were visiting US manufacturers on a hearts-and-minds glad-handing tour, discussing intimate details of new product development with company management and stating their case as OEM support and exploitation only of fixture market niches.

In a market where new ideas are priceless that is looked upon by many I know in the industry as pushing the boundaries of acceptable behaviour. There are a lot of angry people out there this week I know.

Name: skynet   Posted: Mon, 29 Aug 2011 10:08
It is fated that a LED maker should go. Cree would not be the last one. Due to SSL can not be seperated to lamp, fixture and control gear like other lighting. When the SSL fail the whole system should be replaced by using the same stuff from the same brand. Constuction of T5 tube to be a standard is a good example. Why it would not happen now a day. There are many dead street lights in Mainland China but the original supplier is also dead.
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BetaLED begins production of interior LED luminaires (Nov 2010)
Cree’s CEO suggests quicker LED move into general lighting (Dec 2010)
Author
Maury Wright
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